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Quantum mechanics

ResponseCategory: PhilosophyQuantum mechanics
Moses asked 4 days ago

According to quantum theory, can truth also include its opposite? And then a situation arises where both opposing sides are right?

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1 Answer
Michi Staff answered 4 days ago

I don't even understand the sentence you wrote. I guess you don't either (because it really doesn't make sense).

Moses replied 4 days ago

I forgot to mention in a situation of parallel universes of course.

Moses replied 4 days ago

And also in a situation of different angles of view. Maybe your example is appropriate here. With the chocolate that is both delicious and fattening. If you want, it is also delicious and not delicious. What tastes good to me is not necessarily to you. Surely you have better examples. Maybe from an airplane where things look different from the ground. There were those who said that the disagreements in the Mishnah or the Gamma are not real, pretending that they are not really in disagreement. Simply for example, one said there is a pen here because that is what he focused on and the other said paper because that is what he focused on, the two things were lying on the table, it is simply that each saw something different. Or in a situation where you see only the angle and not the square and from your point of view you think there is only an angle here, then you are not wrong.

Moses replied 4 days ago

*If we ask what the thing really is, then yes, there is one truth to it.

Michi Staff replied 4 days ago

Parallel universes is just a slogan and does not concern the logical plane. There is no possibility of logical contradiction in any relation of any discourse, scientific or otherwise. Views from different angles or from different people are not a contradiction. There is nothing special about this in quantum theory. The example of chocolate is from life regardless of quantum theory.

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